44 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			2.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
			
		
	
	
			44 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			2.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
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								title = "Galatians 1:10–24"
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								date = "2023-08-02"
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								### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Galatians1.10-24)
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								In order to back up his claims that the gospel he preached to the Galatians,
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								Paul relates to them how he received the gospel, his conversion, and his early
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								history with the Church. His opponents had been accusing him of changing his
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								message to suit his audience and that he was a renegade preaching something
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								different from the "true apostles" in Jerusalem.
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								Paul begins his argument by saying he wouldn't be a servant of Christ. Most of
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								the time when you see "servant" in the New Testament, the Greek word is more
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								literally "bondservant" which would be better translated as "slave", with all
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								the connotations that implies. Slavery was very common in the Roman Empire, but
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								it was usually entered into voluntarily and there was more opportunity to buy
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								one's freedom back than there was in the Atlantic slave trade system. Paul
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								considers his service to Christ as bought and paid for. What he preaches, then,
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								comes directly from his Master and not from some chain of apostolic authority.
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								(Which is how the Jewish rabbis taught: "As was said by my teacher Gamaliel,
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								who was taught by…"; a practice Paul was very familiar with.)
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								After his conversion, Paul takes great pains to say where he went and whom he
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								spoke with during that time. Shortly after meeting Jesus on the road to
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								Damascus, he escaped to Arabia to avoid those who wanted to kill him. (See
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								[Acts 9:23–25](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Acts9.23-25).) He returned to
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								Damascus at some point, but only after three years did he go to Jerusalem to
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								meet the other apostles. Yet, when he went, he only saw Peter and James
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								(Jesus's brother, not John's) and only for fifteen days. He had already been
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								preaching in the synogogues before this visit that Jesus was the Messiah, and
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								he didn't need any training or approval from the apostles to do so.
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								Note how Paul says in verse 15 that his conversion was planned out by God
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								before he was even born, and that it was the grace of God that brought it
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								about. Throughout his letters he brings up both of these concepts. God's will
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								and His purposes bring about salvation to all who believe, and there's nothing
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								anyone can do or not do to deter it.
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								* * *
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								You are mighty to save and only You can bring it about.
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